1852_in_architecture
1852 in architecture
Overview of the events of 1852 in architecture
The year 1852 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Quick Facts List of years in architecture (table) ...
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- February – Augustus Pugin suffers a breakdown and is admitted to a private asylum, Kensington Housea, London, days after designing the clock tower for the Palace of Westminster.[1]
- June – Augustus Pugin is transferred to the Royal Bethlem Hospital.[1]
- date unknown – Thomas M. Penson restores a house at 22 Eastgate Street, Chester, England, in black-and-white Revival style.[2][3]
Buildings completed
- January 1 – Battle railway station, East Sussex (England), designed by William Tress, is opened.
- February 3 – The House of Commons of the United Kingdom in the Palace of Westminster, London (England) designed by Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin, is opened.
- May 15 – Teatro Comunale Alighieri in Ravenna, designed by Tommaso and Giambattista Meduna, is opened.
- October 14 – London King's Cross railway station, designed by Lewis Cubitt, is opened.[4]
- Helsinki Cathedral, Finland, designed by Carl Ludvig Engel, is completed.
- Chapel of St Edmund's College, Ware, England, designed by Augustus Pugin in 1845, is completed.
- Rolle Mausoleum, Bicton, Devon, England, reconstructed by Augustus Pugin, is completed.
- Siegestor (Victory Gate) in Munich, Bavaria, designed by Friedrich von Gärtner, is completed by Eduard Mezger.
- Åmodt bro suspension bridge, Oslo, Norway.
- Philippi Covered Bridge, West Virginia, United States.[5]
- RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Leo von Klenze.
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture – P.R.L. Ginain.
- June 25 – Antoni Gaudí, Catalan Modernist architect (died 1926)[6]
- July 4 – E. S. Prior, English Arts and Crafts architect and theorist (died 1932)
- May 7 – James Savage, English architect (born 1779; buried in his St Luke's Church, Chelsea)
- May 8 – Giuseppe Jappelli, Italian neoclassical architect and engineer (born 1783)
- July 5 – Matthew Habershon, English architect (born 1789)
- September 14 – Augustus Pugin, English architect, designer, artist and critic (born 1812; "convulsions followed by coma")
- Hill, Rosemary (2007). God's Architect: Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain. pp. 482–490.
- Pevsner, Nikolaus; Hubbard, Edward (2003). The Buildings of England: Cheshire. New Haven; London: Yale University Press. p. 38. ISBN 0-300-09588-0.
- Historic England. "No. 22 Eastgate Street and Row (1376221)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 2017-02-12.
- Jackson, Alan A. (1985). London's Termini. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-8634-7.
- Covered Bridges in West Virginia. Morgantown, West Virginia: Institute for the History of Technology and Industrial Archeology.
- Massó, Juan Bergós (1974). Gaudí, l'home i la obra (in Catalan). Barcelona: Universitat Politècnica de Barcelona. ISBN 84-600-6248-1. pp 17–18
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